When implementing policy, Congress can choose to allocate grants to state governments as grant aid, or for the funds to be administered by agencies at a federal level. In new research Stuart Kasdin and Federica Iorio look at how the dominant ideology of Congressional institutions affects the design of such programs. They find that when Congress and a federal administration share the same partisan orientation, the program is more likely to be administered by the central government than as grant aid to the states, and vice versa. They also write that when an agency has a history of grant making to the states, Congress is more likely to propose grants than central provision
Researchers have struggled to understand why federal block grants, contrary to economic theory, have...
An extensive literature examines how distributive (i.e., “pork barrel”) spending is allocated among ...
State governments have considerable discretion regarding when they use federal grants to deliver goo...
Believing that grants-in-aid to state and local governments disarm the opposition of local elites an...
The authority to raise and spend money is one of the most expansive and fundamental of all Congress\...
Research on the distribution of federal expenditures has provided mixed evidence showing that states...
This article contends that federal agencies ought more frequently to use the threat of cutting off f...
Every year, federal agencies award around $1 trillion in grants and contracts. How do these awards i...
In recent years, members of Congress have inserted thousands of pork-barrel spending projects into b...
A common rationale in allocating government grants and aid is income redistribution. Consider receip...
Scholars have focused attention toward congressional influence over distributive grant allocations, ...
The shift from categorical grants to general revenue sharing and block grants as the form of intergo...
The popular press is currently filled with articles in which words like block grant, entitlement,...
In 1972 Congress added General Revenue Sharing to the list of federal grant-in-aid programs for stat...
In our modern world the problems or government are never simple. The tasks of coordinating, directin...
Researchers have struggled to understand why federal block grants, contrary to economic theory, have...
An extensive literature examines how distributive (i.e., “pork barrel”) spending is allocated among ...
State governments have considerable discretion regarding when they use federal grants to deliver goo...
Believing that grants-in-aid to state and local governments disarm the opposition of local elites an...
The authority to raise and spend money is one of the most expansive and fundamental of all Congress\...
Research on the distribution of federal expenditures has provided mixed evidence showing that states...
This article contends that federal agencies ought more frequently to use the threat of cutting off f...
Every year, federal agencies award around $1 trillion in grants and contracts. How do these awards i...
In recent years, members of Congress have inserted thousands of pork-barrel spending projects into b...
A common rationale in allocating government grants and aid is income redistribution. Consider receip...
Scholars have focused attention toward congressional influence over distributive grant allocations, ...
The shift from categorical grants to general revenue sharing and block grants as the form of intergo...
The popular press is currently filled with articles in which words like block grant, entitlement,...
In 1972 Congress added General Revenue Sharing to the list of federal grant-in-aid programs for stat...
In our modern world the problems or government are never simple. The tasks of coordinating, directin...
Researchers have struggled to understand why federal block grants, contrary to economic theory, have...
An extensive literature examines how distributive (i.e., “pork barrel”) spending is allocated among ...
State governments have considerable discretion regarding when they use federal grants to deliver goo...